National Post (National Edition)

China snaps up discounted Canadian crude

Replacing Venezuela’s bitumen-rich oil

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Chinese oil buyers are making a beeline for a bargain across the Pacific.

With Canadian oil over 60-per-cent cheaper than U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermedia­te and global marker Brent, China’s refiners are being lured to the heavy and sludgy crude. That’s because, apart from being a source of fuel, it’s also rich in bitumen — a black residue used to build everything from roads to runways and roofs.

China’s demand for the material is expected to increase as President Xi Jinping’s government focuses on infrastruc­ture constructi­on in a bid to reform the world’s second-biggest economy. With the availabili­ty of other bitumen-yielding oil varieties such as Venezuela’s Merey shrinking, the Asian nation’s refiners are turning to alternativ­e supplies to feed the building boom at home.

One of their options is Canadian crude, prices for which are tumbling as rising production runs into pipeline bottleneck­s and maintenanc­e work cuts refinery capacity at regular buyers in the U.S. Midwest. In the rest of the world, oil is surging as impending American sanctions squeeze Iranian exports and an economic crisis hits Venezuelan shipments. Fears are rising that OPEC will struggle to ease a looming supply crunch.

“The policy of boosting infrastruc­ture investment has been bullish for bitumen,” said Li Haining, an analyst with industry consultant SCI99 in China’s Shandong province. “The supply of the Merey grade has been disrupted since May, pushing refiners to look elsewhere. As late-september and October is traditiona­lly the peak season for constructi­on projects in China, demand will be further supported.”

China bought 1.58 million barrels of Canadian crude for loading in September, almost 50-per-cent higher than the 1.05 million barrels in April, data from cargotrack­ing and intelligen­ce company Kpler show. Staterun refiner CNOOC Ltd. has chartered a tanker, Nordtulip, to load oil from Vancouver in October, according to shipping fixtures.

With Chinese infrastruc­ture spending in the second half of 2018 seen accelerati­ng at five times the pace in the first six months of the year, expectatio­ns that bitumen demand will increase have boosted prices of the material to a record in the nation. That means refiners producing the residue from relatively cheap Canadian oil would enjoy better profit margins.

The heavy Western Canadian Select crude grade’s discount to U.S. WTI expanded to US$50 early on Wednesday, according to market participan­ts. The absolute price of WCS was at about US$26 a barrel, compared with US$83 for global benchmark Brent crude.

Apart from Canada, China has also turned to producers such as Brazil for alternativ­es, said Wenginn Chin, a senior oil market analyst at industry consultant FGE in Singapore. Demand for heavy crude is particular­ly high among the Asian nation’s independen­t refiners, known as teapots. The Kpler data shows that the Canadian shipments to China are being delivered to northeast ports including Qingdao and Yantai, which serve these processors.

As the teapots face competitio­n from new mega refineries and increased regulatory scrutiny, they are exploring strategies to stay profitable.

Given that the companies have historical­ly been adept at processing heavy crude or residual fuel oil, they could be well-positioned to capitalize on the demand for bitumen and cheaper Canadian oil, according a Bloomberg survey of three traders who participat­e in the market.

“On the demand side, there are expectatio­ns for bitumen growth in China due to a boost in infrastruc­ture spending,” said Sophie Shi, a Beijing-based analyst with industry consultant IHS Markit.

“With traditiona­l heavy oil shipments shrinking globally, trade flows are being reshaped and alternativ­e heavy oil supplies from countries such as Canada are becoming sought after.”

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Bitumen in “pebbles” form. Chinese infrastruc­ture spending is driving demand for bitumen-rich oil.
JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Bitumen in “pebbles” form. Chinese infrastruc­ture spending is driving demand for bitumen-rich oil.

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